You already know that America is a great country that has given the world some spectacular inventions — as well as some briefly entertaining, but ultimately flash-in-the-pan, fads. Of course, it’s also home to unbelievably beautiful landscapes and notable sites on which history was forever changed.

The real question is whether you can match these tidbits of trivia with their home state! Some of these random facts you might remember from history (or "Drunk History"), while others can be guessed if you have an average understanding of contemporary pop culture. So let's get started!

This state's animal, perhaps surprisingly, is the beaver. In 1843, the first chess tournament in the U.S. took place here, and the only American city to host the Olympics twice is in this state.

Connecticut

Rhode Island

New York

Pennsylvania

Lake Placid, two-time location of the Winter Olympics, joins NYC, Seneca Falls, and Woodstock as just a few of the places that make New York State great.

This state has a population smaller than six American cities, and shares its borders with only one other U.S. state. Yet it's the largest producer of toothpicks in the country.

Vermont

New Hampshire

Delaware

Maine

The population of the entire state of Maine is smaller than that of New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, Philadelphia, and Phoenix. Maine is also the easternmost state, and one of the top maple syrup producers, tapping enough syrup each year to fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool.

Don't steal any cattle in this state, or mark a cow with graffiti. Both offenses are still punishable by hanging! The only state to enter the U.S. by treaty, rather than by annexation, this is also home to Dr. Pepper and the world's largest rattlesnake roundup.

Texas

California

New Mexico

Nevada

In 1969, Houston, Texas was hailed by the crew of Apollo 11 -- just another chapter in the long and storied history of this home to the Alamo, the Bowie knife, Frito Pie, and the world's fifth-largest petroleum-producing entity.

Fossilized dinosaur eggs have been found in this state, which is aptly nicknamed the Treasure State. It's also the home to elk, deer, and antelope populations that each outnumber the state's human residents.

North Dakota

South Dakota

Alaska

Montana

Montana also boasts the largest grizzly bear population in the lower 48 states, as well as plentiful numbers of snow geese, tundra swans, nesting common loons, golden eagles, trumpeter swans, pelicans, moose, and buffalo. The state's density of people, on the other hand, is a mere six per square mile.

The largest U.S. state east of the Mississippi, this state is home to the world's largest sculpture and the world's largest poultry convention, the International Poultry Trade Show.

North Carolina

Missouri

Georgia

Alabama

Stone Mountain is the location of the three-acre sculpture, which depicts Confederate heroes Stonewall Jackson, Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, and Robert E. Lee’s horse, Traveller. Georgia is also internationally known as the birthplace of Coca-Cola, and offers visitors a fascinating glimpse into the soda juggernaut at the Coca-Cola Museum in Atlanta.

Kool-Aid was invented here, as was the Reuben sandwich, but the state's most beloved native food is the runza -- a ground-beef-and-cabbage stuffed pastry.

Nebraska

Idaho

Kentucky

South Dakota

The University of Nebraska football team went by several nicknames -- the Old Gold Knights, the Antelopes, the Rattlesnake Boys, and the Bugeaters -- before swiping "Cornhuskers" from neighboring Iowa. In addition to Buffett's company, Berkshire Hathaway, Omaha is also home to the world-class Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium.

Both the first human lung transplant and the first heart transplant happened in this state. Additionally, it's the birthplace to a human who put a lot of heart into his puppets -- Muppets creator Jim Henson.

Arkansas

Mississippi

Louisiana

Missouri

Surgeon James Hardy performed both transplant surgeries at the University of Mississippi Medical Center. The lung transplant patient lived for 18 days following his 1963 operation. The next year, a comatose man named Boyd Rush actually received the heart of a chimpanzee. Rush died within an hour of his transplant surgery -- which was probably for the best, given the controversy surrounding the cross-species transplant.

Fully one-quarter of the country's llama population lives in this state, which also boasts the world's largest cheese factory and more than 750 vineyards. Sharp cheddar and an oaky chardonnay, anyone?

Washington

Montana

California

Oregon

While Portland might garner a significant share of attention thanks to Portlandia, the rest of the state has its delightful quirks as well, including 80 ghost towns listed on the National Register, the country's deepest lake, and the Tillamook Creamery, which produces more cheese than any other factory on earth.

This Southern state was the last one to secede during the Civil War, and the first to be readmitted to the Union. It is bordered by eight other states, and gave us such notable figures as Davy Crockett, Minnie Pearl, Dolley Parton, and Alex Hayley.

Georgia

Alabama

Tennessee

West Virginia

The Volunteer State of Tennessee ties with Missouri for the state with the most neighbors. It's also rich in both African-American and Native American history, as well as being a music lover's paradise. The Grand Ole Opry has been broadcasting from Nashville every Friday and Saturday night since 1925!

This state has given the world the first electric guitar, the first parking meter, and the first shopping cart. Garth Brooks was born and raised here, and it's also home to more than 200 manmade lakes -- more than anywhere else.

Oklahoma

Texas

Arizona

Nevada

The Sooner State, Oklahoma, has the largest population of Native Americans in the U.S. Some 250,000 Native Americans live here, and there are 39 tribal headquarters located here, as well.

Home to the world's largest library, the only drive-thru post office in the country, and the first McDonald's, this state was devastated by a fire in 1871. It was rebuilt, bigger and better -- in fact, the first skyscraper ever was erected here in 1884.

Indiana

Illinois

Kansas

Ohio

The 10-story Home Insurance Building was dizzyingly high for its day, but can't stack up to the 108-floor Willis Tower, formerly known as the Sears Tower, which is also located in this state. As for the Great Chicago Fire? You've probably heard that the inferno was started when Mrs. O'Leary's cow kicked over a kerosene lamp in the barn, but some folks postulate that the blaze was actually kicked off by a meteor!

People who live in this state have to contend not only with hurricanes, but also with more tornados and more lightning strikes than anywhere else in the country. However, it also has more golf courses, proximity to two oceans, and the world's largest recreational resort.

California

Hawaii

North Carolina

Florida

Wherever you go in Florida, you're only 60 miles from a beach. That includes Orlando, where Walt Disney World welcomes an astonishing 20 million visitors each year!

This place borders six other American states and a foreign country. Sarah Palin, Ernest Hemingway, Aaron Paul, and the fictional Napolean Dynamite all have ties to this state, which also boasts the world's largest hops farm.

Idaho

New Mexico

Alaska

Florida

Idaho singlehandedly produces a third of all potatoes consumed in the U.S. That's about 27 billion taters! No word on whether or not Papa Hemingway munched on chips or french fries while penning his famous book, "For Whom the Bell Tolls."

This coastal state began life as a penal colony when tens of thousands of British prisoners were shipped in the 1700s. Unfortunately, it's still infamous for crime, with an annual average of more than 1,400 violent crimes per 100,000 residents. Abolitionists Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass were both born here.

Maryland

Virginia

Delaware

Rhode Island

Despite Maryland's less-than-savory reputation, there's a lot to love about this small state, including the oldest surviving statehouse still in use, the U.S. Naval Academy, and 4,431 miles of tidal shoreline.

We have this state to thank for the Happy Birthday song, Corvettes (the only Corvette factory in the world is located here), and Daniel Boone. Once a county in another state, this place seceded and gained its own statehood in 1792. It's also home to over 1,100 miles' worth of navigable rivers and lakes -- more than any other state besides Alaska.

West Virginia

Kentucky

Arkansas

South Carolina

Kentucky County was first established by Virginians in 1776, but its residents felt they weren't properly represented by the distant capital of Richmond, so they began petitioning for statehood. Separatists got their way less than two decades later, and it's a good thing -- Virginia Fried Chicken just doesn't have the same ring to it.

One of the first states to enter the newly formed union, its name comes from a Native American word meaning "great mountain place" or "large hill place." Not surprisingly, it boasts many other firsts, including the first university, first public park, first newspaper, and first subway system. Its statehouse sits on land that once served as a cow pasture for John Hancock. (Well, technically, for his cows.)

Connecticut

Delaware

Maine

Massachusetts

Students of United States history know that the role Massachusetts played in helping develop our fledgling country can hardly be overestimated. But did you know that European explorers landed on the state's coastline as early as the 11th Century -- hundreds of years before the Pilgrims would settle Plymouth in 1620, or the American Revolution would begin in 1775?

This state was the first to grant women the right to vote, way back in 1869, lending it the nickname, "The Equality State." It was also the first to elect a female governor. Despite being socially progressive -- at least where women in politics are concerned -- this state contains only two escalators.

Montana

Wyoming

Idaho

North Dakota

Nellie Tayloe Ross served as Wyoming's governor between 1925 and 1927, before being appointed by Franklin D. Roosevelt as the director of the U.S. Mint. The state hasn't had a female governor since then, but attracts plenty of female (and male) visitors to Yellowstone and to the ski resort,​ Jackson Hole.

Home to the smallest state capital in the U.S., and the only state capital that doesn't have a McDonald's, this place also has the highest dairy-cow-to-people ratio in the country.

New Hampshire

Vermont

Rhode Island

Delaware

Montpelier, Vermont, has a population of fewer than 7,500 people. Visitors to the tiny state capital won't be able to eat a Big Mac, or a Burger King Whopper, unless they drive about five miles to the neighboring town of Berlin.

The capital city of this state was founded a full decade before Pilgrims arrived on the East Coast and stepped ashore in 1620. It was one of the last states to be admitted to the union. And despite being the fifth largest state in the U.S., about 75 percent of its roads remain unpaved.

Texas

Arizona

Montana

New Mexico

Santa Fe, New Mexico, was founded by Spanish settlers in the first decade of the 17th Century. Yet New Mexico wasn't granted statehood until 1912, making it the fourth to last state admitted to the union. Only Arizona, Hawaii and Alaska became states after the "Land of Enchantment" did.

This state could well have been called Servantsville, as fully three-quarters of its early English settlers were indentured servants. During the decades running up to the Civil War, it was home to more African slaves than any other state. Today, it's also known for its green acres, since some 62 percent of its land remains forest land​.

West Virginia

Georgia

South Carolina

Virginia

Abundant in historical firsts and facts, Virginia played a pivotal role in both the country's founding and its near-dissolution in the mid- to late-19th Century. We mentioned earlier that Kentucky was once part of Virginia proper, but did you know that West Virginia also seceded, because it didn't want to join the Confederacy?

A city in this state holds the Guinness World Record for the largest hamburger ever cooked and served. The enormous patty weighed more than 3,500 pounds and fed some 8,000 burger meisters. Fittingly, another city holds an annual French Fry Feed. What to wash it all down with? How about a glass of milk -- this state produces 38 million gallons each year!

Idaho

Minnesota

Illinois

North Dakota

That French Fry Feed occurs each year during the Potato Bowl in the appropriately named Grand Forks, North Dakota. This Midwestern state boasts more than agriculture and agritourism, however. It's also where you'll find the International Peace Garden, Theodore Roosevelt National Park, a rare albino buffalo -- and, in the Fargo-Moorhead Visitors Center, the movie-prop wood chipper from the Coen Brothers' movie, "Fargo.."

Some of the famous folks who hail from this state include David Letterman, James Dean, Michael Jackson, Colonel Sanders, and Garfield the Cat. It's also the setting of the classic movie, "A Christmas Story" and the home of The Saturday Evening Post.

Kentucky

Rhode Island

Indiana

Michigan

Harlan Sanders has ties to Alabama, Tennessee, and, of course, Kentucky, but the small town of Henryville, Indiana, can lay claim to his birthplace. Similarly, Gary, Indiana is proud of its most famous onetime resident, the King of Pop and the other Jackson sibs. And although Amityville, NY, is known for its true-to-life "horror story," it's the tiny town of Amity, Indiana, that actually has a road with a gravesite right in the middle of it!

Blue jeans were invented here. So were hard hats. And although this state contains the third-deepest lake in the U.S., along with 23 designated wilderness areas, most of its visitors come in search of glitz and gluttony.

California

Nevada

New Jersey

Florida

Natch, we're talking about Nevada. Las Vegas may not be the capital, but it offers its 40 million annual visitors 75K miles worth of neon at which to gawk, along with dreams of striking it rich on the strip. Oh, and those famous Vegas all-you-can-eat buffets? They serve some 60,000 pounds of shrimp every day -- more than is consumed in the entire rest of the U.S. combined!

The New River, which flows through this next state on our list, is the second-oldest river in the world! The longest steel-span bridge in the Western hemisphere, the 3000-foot New River Gorge Bridge, is also in this state, which was once called Kanawha.

Kentucky

North Dakota

North Carolina

West Virginia

West Virginia, sometimes called the northernmost Southern state AND the southernmost Northern state, was signed into statehood by Abraham Lincoln in 1863, after its slavery-opposed residents chose to stick with the Union rather than secede along with regular ol' Virginia. That makes it the only state created by presidential proclamation.

The country's biggest producer of apples, raspberries and cherries, this state also gave us two of the country's largest, and most iconic, retailers. And one of its towns, Longview, has thoughtfully built several bridges just for squirrels.

Washington

Oregon

California

Montana

Aberdeen, Washington, pays homage to the late, great Kurt Cobain with its town sign, which exhorts visitors to "Come As You Are." Who knows if Cobain penned any Nirvana lyrics while sitting in a Starbucks, which -- along with internet marketplace Amazon -- remains one of Washington State's most well-known exports.

Barbie's fictional home is located in this state, as is the very real Fennimore Doll & Toy Museum. And speaking of fiction that masquerades as truth, the satire newspaper-cum-website, The Onion, got its start at one of this state's universities.

Illinois

Wisconsin

Kansas

Arkansas

In addition to Barbie, other famous Wisconsinites include Chris Farley, Frank Lloyd Wright, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Liberace, and Harry Houdini. In 1962, a 20-pound chunk of Soviet satellite Sputnik IV crashed to the ground in Manitowoc. Although Wisconsin generously returned the outer-space souvenir to the Soviets, they also created a replica, which is showcased each September during Sputnikfest -- no doubt a necessary distraction for a town that has since become famous thanks to the Netflix true-crime series, "Making a Murderer."

The site of the only remaining diamond mine in the U.S., this state now displays the Strawn-Wagner diamond, considered the first perfect example of that gemstone ever unearthed. On a slightly less glamorous note, the World Cheese Dip Championship is held here each year.

Illinois

Massachusetts

Texas

Arkansas

It's Arkansas, y'all! Home of former U.S. president Bill Clinton and former Democratic candidate for president Hillary Rodham Clinton, this state has a long history of sending Democrats to D.C., including Hattie Ophelia Caraway. Caraway, the first woman elected to the Senate, served from November 13, 1931 – January 3, 1945.

Perhaps because of the 26 mountains higher than 10,000 feet in elevation, this state has been known to register the highest temperature in the country and the lowest temperature in the country -- on the very same day! Its sheer size may also have something to do with its disparate temps. All of New England plus Pennsylvania would fit inside its borders.

Arizona

Texas

California

Nevada

Head to Arizona to see roadrunners IRL. These birds have been clocked at 17 mph! (To say nothing of their ability to disappear through painted-on railroad tunnels.) Just be sure to pack not just your sandals, but also a pair of warm socks and a light jacket, so you'll be prepared for wherever the mercury goes!

This state has produced 25 NASA astronauts and eight U.S. presidents. Oh, and drummer Dave Grohl of Nirvana and Foo Fighters fame, whose hometown of Warren honored him by erecting a pair of 900-pound drumsticks.

Virginia

Ohio

Rhode Island

Washington

Ohai, Ohio! History buffs can visit The One and Only Presidential Museum in Williamsfield, Ohio (yep, that's the real name!), to learn whether or not it's something in the water. Speaking of Grohl and "Dirty Water," Ohio residents once took umbrage at Dr. Seuss' slam of Lake Erie, eventually prompting him to rewrite part of "The Lorax."

If you've ever chowed down on the meaty monstrosity known as a "turducken," you have a famous chef from this place to thank. Ditto the delicacy of alligator, some two million of which live in the wild. This state farms another 300,000 for their meat and hide, worth $57 million annually.

Mississippi

Arkansas

Louisiana

Florida

Laissez les bons temps rouler in Louisiana! It's the only state in the nation that does not have counties, but rather parishes. The 1.4 million people who visit New Orleans for Mardi Gras each year likely care less about that, and more about the lack of open-container laws on Canal Street.

Ozzy Ozbourne once chowed down on a bat in this state's capital (presumably before most of the drugs had done their damage). Too bad he didn't choose a ham, since hogs outnumber people here by a ratio of 21:3, or even a Red Delicious apple, which originated at an orchard here.

Oregon

Nebraska

Kansas

Iowa

Iowa, home to the house in "American Gothic," certainly claims some unusual historical moments, but one of the most groundbreaking was in 2009, when it became only the third state to declare that forbidding same-sex marriage was unconstitutional.

Despite its small stature, its official name is the longest of any state's. It has 384 miles of shoreland. And it's the only place in the nation that still celebrates Victory Day, on the second Monday in August.

Rhode Island

Delaware

Massachusetts

Hawaii

Victory Day, once a federal holiday celebrating the end of WWII, was dropped by all other states by 1975 (probably because it also coincides with the anniversaries of the bombings of Nagasaki and Hiroshima). But "the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations" -- its official name -- still celebrates. On a slightly more politically correct note, it was also the first state government to enact a Homeless Bill of Rights, in 2012.

Stand anywhere in this state, and you'll be within 85 miles of a Great Lake. That helps explain why it has the seventh highest number of registered fishermen in the U.S. Just watch out for a notorious Bermuda Triangle-like area over one of those lakes, where many ships and planes have mysteriously vanished!

New York

Ohio

Wisconsin

Michigan

The Lake Michigan Triangle has a history every bit as eerie as its Bermuda counterpart, with not only missing watercraft but also several UFO sightings. Perhaps travelers were attempting to reach Isle Royale, the nation's least-visited national park, which receives fewer visitors each year than Yosemite gets in a single day!

This place declared independence from Great Britain a full six months before the official Declaration of Independence was penned. Its delegates were the first to vote for the good ol' D. of I. on the original Fourth of July, and its motto, "Live Free or Die," references the Revolutionary War.

Vermont

New Hampshire

Connecticut

New York

General John Stark penned the defiant motto of New Hampshire in 1809, reflecting on his experience leading the charge at the 1777 Battle of Bennington. Freedom has always meant a lot to the citizens of this New England state, which was home to the country's first free public library, and which remains free of sales tax to this day.

More densely populated than China, this state's residents fill their bellies at hundreds of classic diners. Many of these eateries are just off the Turnpike, which is so ubiquitous that natives are prone to ask "What exit?" rather than "Where are you from?"

New Jersey

New York

Florida

Delaware

New Joisey -- 'scuse us, New Jersey -- gets a bad rap owing to Snooki & Co. of "Jersey Shore" fame and fictional waste-management mogul Tony Soprano and his ilk. Oh, and the whole "armpit of America" thing. And the wreck of the Hindenburg. And the tawdry, tacky Las Vegas-wannabe that is Atlantic City. But it truly is a beautiful place, or at least some of it is. Whyn'tcha stop taking this quiz and do like the state motto says, "Come See For Yourself"?

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